Archive for July, 2008

Democrats stand athwart history saying STOP!

Friday, July 11th, 2008

UPDATE: Senator Cornyn agrees and plans to make this a focus of the fall campaign.

The present crisis in oil and gasoline prices may be aggravated by speculation in the futures market but the principle factor is supply and demand. China and India are industrializing, a process that will only accelerate in the next decades, and their oil consumption is rising. Alternate energy sources must be developed. Nuclear power has been blocked from expansion by a weird combination of aging 1950s era ban-the-bomb activists

President Bush is promoting the use of nuclear power plants to generate electricity. It seems a political choice. Investing in nuclear power plants can be attempted only by very large corporations, of the kind that are in his support base. They belong to a very exclusive big-money club, and there are many billions of dollars at stake. But to belong, one also has to be willing to forget Three Mile Island, to forget market economics, nuclear proliferation, radioactive waste and, in particular, to forget nuclear terrorism.

and environmentalists who would prefer that much of the world’s human population die off quietly.

We must also work to slow population growth by increasing access to voluntary family planning and reproductive health programs so that families are better able to choose the number and spacing of their children. The Sierra Club’s Global Population and Environment Program supports efforts to empower women and families through education about responsible reproductive health and natural resource use— vital components of the global goal to secure a healthier environmental future.

The Congressional Democrats seem to be determined to obstruct any attempt to increase oil production domestically in spite of possible serious consequences at the polls this fall.

“This call for drilling in areas that are protected is a hoax,” Ms. Pelosi said. “It’s an absolute hoax on the part of the Republicans and this Bush administration.”

I hope John McCain is flexible enough and quick enough to use this issue to change the dynamic of the Congressional elections. With Congress’ approval rating at 9%, the entire theme of the 2008 elections, massive defeat for Republicans, may not be inevitable.

This is too good to miss

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

McCain should figure out a way to use this video in a commercial.

It’s just too good to miss. Plus Nozzle Rage is a good source. I’ve ordered Zubrin’s book.

When free riders get sick

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

This story today in the NY Times is sad but should be expected. Read it closely.

Chaim Benamor, 52, a self-employed renovator in this Baltimore suburb. Mr. Benamor never found it necessary to buy insurance before having a mild heart attack last year and now, 13 years shy of Medicare, has little hope of doing so.

Here is a classic free rider. He is 52 and has never had health insurance. The usual free rider is a young adult who is healthy and who is convinced he or she will never get sick; or at least won’t get sick during the very limited time frame these people consider. The young free rider worries, if they worry at all, about accidents but they reassure themselves that a big medical bill due to an accident can be dealt with by bankruptcy. Now, we have a man with two problems. He is old enough to have possessions that would be seriously affected by a bankruptcy, and two, bankruptcy cannot be used again for years.

Mr. McCain’s proposal stands in sharp relief to that of his Democratic rival, Senator Barack Obama of Illinois, who wants to require insurers to accept all applicants, regardless of their health. That is now the law in five states, including New York and New Jersey.

For those who can afford the premiums, or who qualify for subsidies in the 13 states that provide them, the high-risk programs can be a godsend.

This does not solve the problem of premiums for these high risk policies. Obama’s plan does not require mandatory purchase of insurance, as Hillary’s plan did, and so it does not solve the riddle of the free rider. The risk pool plans are also a poor solution.

A fifth of the 14,000 participants in the Maryland plan receive subsidies that drop their premiums below the market rates charged to healthy people, said Richard A. Popper, the plan’s director. But many in the middle find the policies both unaffordable and intolerably restrictive, and Mr. Popper estimates that two-thirds of those eligible have not enrolled.

A comprehensive plan, to use Senator McCain’s term, will be necessary. I have previously suggested that the French model is a useful one.

Murtha strikes again

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

Congressman John Murtha is alleged to be a former Marine. There is a saying that “Once a Marine, always a Marine” but there are a few exceptions. Murtha is one. He is already being sued for slander by more than one Marine. Not deterred, he commits another libel as he adopts the new Democrat strategy to deal with the success in Iraq. Why are we winning in spite of Murtha and Harry Reid (who said the war is lost a year ago) ?

I’m not sure if it’s because the Iraqis are just worn out but certainly the way they are doing it today it makes a big difference. It used to be we broke down doors. We went in and we killed people inadvertantly. Now they’re much more careful about it.

That, of course, is not the only Democrat theory:

Since Iran is now in total control of Iraq, and since the Iraqi government is an open ally of Iran, the Iranians have stopped sponsoring terrorism in Iraq. Iran has won.

Because Iraq is now openly aligned with Iran, it will never be an American ally, so we need to withdraw our troops immediately. The war is over; Iraq is lost to us, and Iran has expanded its influence. It’s all a disaster brought about by that lying liar Bush.

Yet, there is no reason to refer to these people as unpatriotic.

E J Dionne knows why. Patriotism is racism.

If the 2008 election is to be a debate about the true meaning of patriotism, then bring it on.

Ever since Barack Obama took off his flag pin, Democrats and liberals have had a queasy feeling that talk of patriotism would be a covert way to raise the matter of Obama’s race; to cast him as some sort of alien figure (“You know what his middle name is?”); and to paint him as an effete intellectual out of touch with true American values.

In fact, every criticism of Obama is racism but this is extra bad.

An old lady learns to dance

Friday, July 4th, 2008

ragtime2.jpg

UPDATE #3- Ragtime has won her class in the Sydney-Hobart Race. She was given almost 2 hours credit for going to the aid of a 53 foot boat that had lost its rudder and was taking on water.

She was the 18th boat to finish and also the first non-Australian and the first wooden finisher. She just keeps winning.

UPDATE #2- Ragtime has won the Tahiti Race overall on corrected time. The story is here. Ragtime won the first-to-finish trophy for this race in 1973.

UPDATE: Ragtime still leads the Tahiti Race and the report on 7/5/08 is: “Ragtime: wet and fast all night long.” Finish time estimated on 7/7 at noon.

In 1971, when I was sailing my Cal 25 one day off Marina Del Rey, I saw a low and sleek black yacht come out of the harbor and sail past us. It’s name was Ragtime. I later learned that it had been brought to California by John Hall, a yacht broker and owner of a Columbia 50. I then found that it was for sale for $19,000 ! Even then, that was a small price. I talked to my next-door neighbor, with whom I had done some sailing on his family boat. We decided that a 62-foot boat was more than we could handle and it probably needed a lot of work. We were correct on both counts.

A year later, my wife and I were at anchor at Catalina Island, at the Isthmus, when we saw the boat again. It had been purchased by a syndicate of owners from Long Beach Yacht Club. Most of them were aboard that day and we went over in our dinghy to compliment them and get a closer look. That was 35 years ago.

Ragtime began in 1964 as a yacht named Infidel and eventually made her way to California after being excluded from races in New Zealand because of her light construction. She is built of plywood and has hard chines as a consequence. The Long Beach Syndicate made history as Ragtime was first to finish in the 1973 Transpac. The favorite that year was Windward Passage, the great racing yacht that is still a legend. Ragtime appeared behind ‘Passage a day or so before the finish and she is so low that she looks like a submarine. The next day, she had passed them and the finish was exciting as they both had trouble finding the line and sailed though a fleet of spectator boats at midnight doing 17 knots. Ragtime won first to finish by less than 5 minutes.

The syndicate sold Ragtime to Bill White, a doctor from Sierra Madre (near Pasadena) and Bill Pasquini, both Long Beach YC members, and in 1975 everyone wondered if the new owners could make her go as fast. Once again she was first to finish. Since that time, she has sailed a total of 14 Transpacs and many Mexican races when they were run back in the 70s. She was so fast, and so wet, that they would seal up the foredeck hatch for the duration of the race. Her bow was often under water when she was going fast; and that was much of the time.

Eventually, she fell upon hard times. Few race boats inspire affection after they stop winning races. She even ended up being auctioned off by the sheriff, like some old car. Fortunately, she fell into good hands and was resurrected.

On her way to the shipyard

Here she is on her way to the shipyard after the auction. By 2007, with a new high tech keel, she was racing again.

Last month, she was one of four boats to begin the race to Tahiti, the first since the race was last run in 1994. It is a far greater challenge than the Hawaii Race since the course crosses the equator and the boats must pass through the Doldrums. Trade winds on the other side blow in the opposite direction. In the north Pacific, the Trades blow from the northeast, driven by the summer north Pacific High, which rotates clockwise sending strong breezes from east to west. In the south Pacific, high pressure rotates counterclockwise, just as the coriolis effect dictates how water rotates as it goes down the drain. We were at Catalina that weekend and Sunday, the 22nd, we sailed back to Los Angeles keeping an eye out for the race boats. We saw them about half way across, close hauled but with a good breeze and able to lay the West End without tacking. Now they are 11 days into the race.

If you play around with this tracking site, and enter Ragtime as boat name, you can follow the track and see how the course differs from the Hawaii Race.

Magnitude 80, a modern ultralight maxi boat 80 feet long, has finished, breaking the old record by three days but Ragtime still leads on handicap time and could win one more race.

LOS ANGELES TAHITI 2008
DAILY STANDINGS
07/04/08
(0600 PDT)
==============================================
DST CORR STDGS
ID YACHT LAT LON 2GO CL FL Finish/ ETA
================================================
DIVISION 1:
————————————————————–
156 MAGNITUDE 80 FINISHED 0 1 2 03/23:13:18
93 MEDICINE MAN 09-55- 146-42 483 2 4 06/02:08
————————————————————–
DIVISION 2:
—————————————————————
90 FORTALEZA 01-09- 140-05 1127 2 3 09/16:13
152 RAGTIME 05-25- 143-24 809 1 1 07/16:34
—————————————————————
Yachts listed: 4 07/04/2008 11:05:48

Note that the latitude is zero at the equator and Tahiti is 17° 52 minutes south and 149° 56 west. Hawaii is 20 degrees north. Ragtime still has 12 degrees, 27 minutes south and 6 minutes, 32 degrees west to go. In the southern hemisphere, the trade winds generally blow from west and south to north and east so the boats are beating and close reaching into the wind, very different conditions from the Transpac race to Hawaii, which is mostly a broad reach after the first few days. These are not her best conditions but she is still 1 and 1, so far. Not bad for an old lady.

Obama is trapped

Friday, July 4th, 2008

UPDATE: Charles Krauthammer nails it.

In last week’s column, I thought I had thoroughly chronicled Obama’s brazen reversals of position and abandonment of principles — on public financing of campaigns, on NAFTA, on telecom immunity for post-Sept. 11 wiretaps, on unconditional talks with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — as he moved to the center for the general election campaign. I misjudged him. He was just getting started.

Yesterday, Obama had two news conferences. The first was to discuss “nuances” in his Iraq policy.

Mr. Obama said at his first news conference on Thursday that he planned a “thorough assessment” of his Iraq policy when he visited that country this summer.

“I’ve always said that the pace of withdrawal would be dictated by the safety and security of our troops and the need to maintain stability,” he said. “That assessment has not changed. And when I go to Iraq and have a chance to talk to some of the commanders on the ground, I’m sure I’ll have more information and will continue to refine my policies.”

The second, called “an emergency news conference” by Charlie Gibson of ABC News, was to beat back the waves of rage from his defeatist left wing base.

[T]he Obama campaign scheduled a second news conference to try to clarify his remarks. “We’re going to try this again,” Mr. Obama said. “Apparently, I wasn’t clear enough this morning on my position with respect to the war in Iraq.”

He has no room to maneuver, at least before the election. The Democratic Part left wing, the people who gave Obama the nomination, are, in Churchill’s famous words, “decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity.”

The discomfort with all this is obvious in left wing blogs like Kevin Drum’s. The comments show how furiously they are spinning the Obama drifting and flopping about on policy.

Wesley Clark; his friends speak out

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

Wesley Clark has been on the news lately. First he was a Hillary supporter. Now he is an Obama supporter. He is trashing John McCain. What did Clark’s own friends say about him back when his autobiography came out ? Hint: It wasn’t nice.

Like his fellow airwave-hog Richard Holbrooke, the State Department’s special negotiator in the run-up to the Kosovo bombing, Clark sought to wage the war by chatting up Tom Brokaw and Christiane Amanpour. He made end-runs around the U.S. Army chain of command and leaked information to other branches of government (State, in particular) and other governments (Britain’s, in particular).

But at the same time, his methods led him into a propagandistic press strategy that was transparent to anyone paying the slightest bit of attention to the war. And they hurt him in U.S. military circles, where he was considered a showboating egotist and a devious political operator. Defense Secretary William Cohen told Clark, through Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Hugh Shelton, “Get your fucking face off the TV.” Shelton didn’t trust him. Nor did Gen. Eric Shinseki, subsequently Army chief. And once the Kosovo operation was finished, Cohen–with no objection from President Clinton–ended Clark’s tour of duty early. In essence, sacked him.

Hmmm…

Inartful, at best.

Happy Fourth of July

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

Happy Fourth of July. This is what it’s all about.